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Cars in Cuba. (Technology Update Information).


With 11 million educated citizens, Cuba is a huge, untapped automotive market. Less than 1% of its population now own vehicles. Indeed, this single country could soak up much of the vehicle manufacturing capacity now laying fallow fallow

a pale cream, light fawn, or pale yellow coat color in dogs.
 in the U.S. Even more fascinating is the possibility that this island nation could leapfrog the U.S. in transportation. With little existing infrastructure to protect, it could create the first truly 21st-century transportation system, one without many of the ills afflicting af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 how Americans move today. This could be a world powered by fuel cells, integrated multi-modal systems, computer-coordinated, collaborative vehicle pooling, intelligent transportation systems, etc.

Cuba, for the last half-century, has tried to carve its own way with bold social experiments. It could do the same in transportation. Today Cuba is a world apart from the U.S. in terms of transportation. More Cubans rely on horse and buggies The horse and buggy (in American English) or horse and carriage (in British English) refers to a light, simple two-person carriage drawn by one or two horses. It was made with two wheels in England and with four wheels in the United States.  than automobiles. Transportation in the rural provinces is by standing on the back of an open-air truck. Bicycles are everywhere and are overwhelmingly used by commuters, not by children or sports enthusiasts. Traffic in Havana is unlike that anywhere else in the world. Charging down the streets of the capital are motorcycles with sidecars, pedicabs, 1950's-era Detroit cars, and jellybean-shaped, three-wheel taxis taxis (tăk`sĭs), movement of animals either toward or away from a stimulus, such as light (phototaxis), heat (thermotaxis), chemicals (chemotaxis), gravity (geotaxis), and touch (thigmotaxis). , known as "Cocos." 1970's era Russian-built Ladas, Mockbuys and tiny Polish-built Fiats are also common. Illustrative il·lus·tra·tive  
adj.
Acting or serving as an illustration.



il·lustra·tive·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 of Cuba's creative bent to mass transportation is its "Camel' bus [El Camello]. Three bus bodies are welded together end-to-end in this tractor-trailer-style bus. Over 400 Cubans pack into one Camel. The ride costs one peso [four cents]. The majo rity of the country's vehicles are government owned. A single U.S. car dealer could sell more vehicles per year than all of Cuba now buys--about 3,000 per year. [About half of those are purchased by the MINTUR MINTUR Ministerio de Turismo Y Deporte del Uruguay (Spanish) , the Ministry of Tourism.] At last estimate, the number of miles on the average car was 227,000 miles; this figure would be much higher if it included so called "antique" cars, i.e., the pre-1959 American automobiles. About 20% of the privately owned vehicles now on the streets are these American classics.

The Cuban government's current attitude to private-car ownership is essentially: Forget it. Few citizens can get government permission to buy a car. Fewer yet can afford to actually buy one. With much of the country's scarce, hard currency going to pay for imported oil and gas, the last thing the government wants is for more people to drive. Also discouraging casual trips is the relative high cost of gas. To fill the tank is the equivalent to two month's salary.

On the plus side, the dearth of automobiles means there are no traffic jams. Unlike the typical American city, most of the urban landscape is not paved over with parking lots. Auto junkyards don't exist. Virtually everything is recycled. Indeed, some 1950's era American cars have repeatedly had many parts "creatively" replaced from other brands. After a point, the vehicle becomes a truly generic, 1950's American automobile because so many different types of parts have been added. Aftermarket Aftermarket

See: Secondary market.


aftermarket

See secondary market.
 parts is about the only automotive business in the country. These parts are typically distributed and sold beneath the official-government, radar screen, however. Car dealerships This article is about car dealerships. For the indie pop band, see Dealership (band).

A car dealership or vehicle local distribution is a business that sells new cars and/or used cars at the retail level, based on a dealership contract with an automaker or
 do exist--intended primarily for foreigners Foreigners

alienage

the condition of being an alien.

androlepsy

Law. the seizure of foreign subjects to enforce a claim for justice or other right against their nation.

gypsyologist, gipsyologist

Rare.
 living in Cuba, not for nationals. The least expensive new vehicle: a $5,000 Daewoo Tico The Daewoo Tico was a city car produced by the Korean automaker GM Daewoo from 1991 to 2001.

The Tico was based on the 1988 Suzuki Alto. The car was equipped with a three-cylinder 796 cc S-TEC engine and had a five-speed manual transmission.
 from South Korea.
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Article Details
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Author:Piszczalski, Martin
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:5CUBA
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:565
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